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Archive for June, 2008

better living through ikea ii

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

As well as our new kitchen storage, I wanted a desk for my sewing machine and the computer that I am one day going to treat myself too. Probably an ibook. I had explained that I have no workspace, we just have the computer table, which is really SKs place of gaming.

In IKEA, we purchased the ingo for me. The ingo looks like this when you get it:

But it takes about ten or fifteen minutes only to assemble. After it is assembled, it looks like this:

It will be painted to make it look like my table. I plan to personalise it. It is a great desk. Long ago, I posted that dining room tables make the best desks.

better living through ikea

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

ikea came to nothern ireland last year sometime before christmas i think.  but, northern ireland is far away. at least i though it was.  it turns out its not so much of a drive once you have negotiated your way into the port tunnel. from there, it is only about two hours to belfast.

SK was an Ikea virgin.  I was too until I went to the IKEA in Stockholm before Christmas.

Yesteday, we made our overdue trip up north. Gale force winds were forecast so we could justify skipping cancelled racing.  Off we went.

I never thought I would say this, but there is life before IKEA and then there is life after IKEA.  Since we moved into our home over two years ago, I have been dreaming about a new kitchen. We were stuck for countertop space and storage space. Badly stuck.  I had kitchen drawings done up for my improvements. It was going to cost about three or four thousand euro, a small bit of a stretch in a new house when you have spent thousands already on flooring, curtains, blinds e.t.c. So, we lived with the kitchen.  Recently it had started driving me crazy again.  In IKEA, we saw a butchers block table. It looks like this when you get it.

Some people find flat pack furniture daunting, I love it. It took about half an hour to assemble. Another half an hour to actually rehome stuff from drawer to new block. This rehoming of saucepans and frying pans has given us a whole 900mm drawer back, perfect for storing lots of food in. Food was our major problem, given that we like to have ten tins of tomatoes in the house in case we run out.

The new butchers block, as well as being home to saucepans e.t.c. now houses the bread bin and a new IKEA pestle and mortar. I like IKEA. This simple piece of kitchen storage means I can put away my expensive drawings to re do the whole kitchen.

project sewing

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

A friend of mine recently had a baby. I was thinking about what to get her (and him) when I decided that it would really be a nice idea to make something. It is somehow more meaningful to go to the trouble of finding fat quarters and matrerial to go with them and to cut squares and sew.

Here is my sewing machine. The last time I had this out, it was to hem some trousers I had cut and altered for SK. I had to use one of the complicated stiches to stop them from fraying, I don’t have a proper overlocking machine. I don’t have my own large work desk either.

This is my craft table. In the living room. I hope to soon have a proper desk installed in our “study” so that I can leave the sewing machine out permanently. I had forgotten that I actually enjoy making stuff. The leaving the machine out so I will use it problem I hope to solve soon in Ikea. I want an Ingo table that I can paint and cover with oil cloth. They are so ridiculously cheap it would not be a splurge to get some oil cloth from Liberty except that would require a trip to London. I might have to make do with oil cloth from Hickeys.

Getting back to the current reality and not dreams of Ikea, I wanted to protect our dining room table (which I extended by opening the flap, it doubles in size) but I didn’t have oil cloth. So I used a sheet. Fitted sheets make interesting table cloths, I like the way they look like puffball skirts on the table because of the elastic.

The thing about not using your sewing machine for a long time is that you forget how important tension is to a sewing machine. Suddenly, it just won’t sew and you get loops of top thread stuck in the material. While trying to rectify the problem (cos you can’t remember how you did it the last time) you make a thread ball.

Still, it was worth it. These are my rows, ready to be stiched together. The thing I am most pleased about is the total lack of baby boy blue, which I don’t like any more than I like baby girl pink. I loathe the boy equals blue, girl equals pink nonsense. I bought a baby grow for another friend last year and I never gave it to her. It seemed so unoriginally boyish in the baby blue sense.

Once the rows are stitched together, I will have to wait for the wadding to come from England, then I will be sewing on a back cover and quilting the whole thing, ready for delivery to my new mother friend. Who presumably might have a pram or cot to use this in.

I completely overestimated the size of the quilt (not thinking about prams and buggies, thinking more about beds) so I might make another one.  I have enough squares to make a second one.   If I do, I might sell it on Etsy. I don’t know would anyone buy such a quilt.

Photographs of the finished product to come, less grainy photographs hopefully, ones taken with a proper camera and not my mobile.  I suppose then I can decide about Etsy.   When I have a finished product to advertise with proper photographs.

(SK, where is the canon?)